I followed
unclesyd’s advice and browsed the frigo site; this is what I found:
“Fingerprint-less Stainless Steel
· Genuine 304 stainless steel with all the unique and desirable properties of stainless steel - including antibacterial, anti-stain and rust proof, and yet it does not, and will never show fingerprints.
· licensed/patented product of Frigo Design.
· Available in plain, quilted and V-formation patterns and has the same brilliance associated with real Stainless
· Easier to clean than standard stainless steel. No special cleaners! Just simply wipe with any household cleaner or warm water.
TL Sets and/or Panels Only for refrigerators - Upcharge = $100.”
It is clearly an extra processing step applied to their stainless steel products, and does not sound like a coating. My educated guess is that a heavy-duty passivation treatment is applied to maximize the Cr/Fe ratio of the surface. This gives the purest, most protective Cr oxide film. [Note: it probably doesn’t involve electropolishing as no appearance change is mentioned.] Anyone seriously interested in frigo's can try a patent search (please post results).
So, to
elroy and others, passivation is one means of minimizing the fingerprint problem, as pointed out in some of the finishing.com answers.
As the fingerprint problem is similar to salt corrosion near seacoasts, this bulletin on preventing coastal corrosion may be of practical interest: